At a time when headlines trumpet the potential
dangers of "bird flu," Gary Butcher is the man of the hour.

Butcher has been an extension veterinarian at
the University of Florida's College of Veterinary Medicine since 1988.
He was trained as a veterinarian specializing in avian diseases, and
has a Ph.D. in poultry virology.

As the only poultry veterinarian in the state,
Butcher fields phone calls and e-mails about avian flu every day.

Lately, he's been traveling the world, speaking
to alarmed government officials and industry groups dispelling the myths
and reinforcing the realities of avian influenza or so-called "bird
flu."

Gary Butcher begins his presentation with a slide
that shows a "news flash" from the British press agency Reuters
reporting that avian flu "poses the single biggest threat to the
world right now."

The H5N1 avian flu virus has led to the death
of 150 million birds, either through infection or culling to prevent
the virus from spreading. So far, however, the number of people who
have become infected remains small, with 121 confirmed illnesses and
62 reported fatalities as of Monday. No one has yet been proven to have
given avian influenza to someone else.

The World Health Organization continues to warn
that a human pandemic may occur and has advised national governments
to make contingency plans. President Bush is expected to announce today
the White House strategy for handling a potential pandemic during a
visit to the National Institutes of Health.

"The emphasis of all my work has changed
to dealing with this madness," Butcher said Friday, while briefly
back at his office on the UF campus in Gainesville. "Realistically,
avian influenza is not a threat to people, but everywhere you go, it
has turned into a circus."

He's been to Indonesia and Thailand, Hong Kong
and Mexico, and a few days from now, he will be in Russia.

The poultry industries in those countries have
been greatly disrupted because of the public's flu fear. In countries
where poultry consumption has dropped by 75 percent, it's a real crisis,
Butcher said. So from an economic perspective, bird flu is a big issue.

Millions of chickens and waterfowl have been slaughtered
in Asia in an attempt to halt the spread of the bird virus known as
H5N1, but Butcher said that of the billions of people who have probably
been exposed, only about 120 have been reported to have fallen ill with
avian flu. They were people who worked closely with chickens and came
into contact with the birds' blood and feces.

Butcher also said that there has yet to be a proven
case in which one person is known to have passed the illness on to another.

Bird flu viruses have been around throughout history,
he said. What is unique about the H5N1 strain is that, on rare occasions,
it has shown the ability to infect humans.

"It is very inefficient, but it does manage,"
Butcher said.

That same inefficiency makes it much more likely
that the virus can't replicate itself rapidly enough to spread from
that first infected human to another, he said. Could happen, but not
likely. That's his view.

But the virus can go from poultry to the wild
bird population, which will carry it to other locales along their migration
routes.

If and when it comes to this part of the world,
Butcher predicts, it will get here via migratory shorebirds or waterfowl
coming from Russia, through Siberia, across the Bering Strait, down
through Alaska and Canada.

"That's how it is probably going to come
in, and it is of very little relevance," he said, because the poultry
industry in this part of the world is so different than in the parts
of the world that have been affected so far.

Not all health officials are sounding a warning
about avian influenza, either.

Dr. Marc Siegel, a practicing internist and associate
professor of medicine at the New York University School of Medicine,
is one physician who isn't buying into the scare scenario.

And if Americans are scared of avian flu now,
Siegel continues, "imagine what will happen if a single scrawny,
flu-ridden migratory bird somehow manages to reach our shores."

That, he maintains, is how the fear epidemic -
as opposed to a flu pandemic - spreads.

Back to the unlikely scenario of those migratory
birds carrying avian flu to a poultry house somewhere in Kansas.

"Only once in every blue moon do you get
infection in a poultry house, and the government has a system of monitoring
and eradication that means it is quickly wiped out," Butcher said.
"So it can happen, but it is rare and it is not allowed to spread."

Because the United States exports about one-third
of the 9 billion poultry produced, if potentially dangerous disease
turns up, there is a policy of zero tolerance.

"Other countries would not accept poultry
from anywhere in the United States if there was any question of infection,"
Butcher said.

He said that although there is a potential that
the virus could mutate, as it exists, it could not become an important
disease in humans.

"For it to become dangerous to humans, it
has to go through a pretty significant genetic change. If you put this
in perspective, it's not going to happen. For a person to be infected
now, it appears that the exposure level has to be astronomical,"
Butcher said.

"While we are putting all our attention on
this avian influenza, another virus is going to come up and bite us
in the bottom," he said.